This is an archive of the 2018-2019 University Catalog.
To access the most recent version, Please visit catalog.csun.edu.

Program: B.A., Mathematics

Four-Year Integrated (FYI) Mathematics Subject Matter Program for the Single Subject Credential

Program Description

The Four-Year Integrated Mathematics (FYI-Math) teacher credential program is designed for students who are certain about their career choice. For admission, students must be eligible for a course in Basic Skills Analytical Reading and Expository Writing and for MATH 150A, and they should see a teacher preparation or credential advisor in the Department of Mathematics. Upon entering the program in their freshman year, students are assigned to a cohort and for some courses must enroll in a section designated for that cohort.

FYI-Math incorporates the requirements for a bachelor’s degree in Mathematics (Secondary Teaching option) with the requirements for General Education, Title 5 and the Preliminary Single Subject Credential in Mathematics. Students also will be responsible for passing the Upper Division Writing Proficiency Exam (UDWPE) and California Basic Educational Skills Test (CBEST). Students enrolled in FYI-Math follow the schedule and sequence of classes listed below. Completion of the FYI-Math program satisfies all GE requirements.

Admission into programs leading to licensure and credentialing does not guarantee that students will obtain a license or credential. Licensure and credentialing requirements are set by agencies that are not controlled by or affiliated with the CSU, and requirements can change at any time. For example, licensure or credentialing requirements can include evidence of the right to work in the United States (e.g., Social Security number or tax payer identification number) or successfully passing a criminal background check. Students are responsible for determining whether they can meet licensure or credentialing requirements. The CSU will not refund tuition, fees or any associated costs to students who determine subsequent to admission that they cannot meet licensure or credentialing requirements. Information concerning licensure and credentialing requirements is available from the department.

Program Requirements

Year One: First semester (14 units)

MATH 150A Calculus I (5)
GE Basic Skills: Analytical Reading and Expository Writing (3)
GE Subject Explorations: Arts and Humanities (3)
GE Subject Explorations: Comparative Cultural Studies (3)

Year One: Second Semester (16 units)

COMS 151/L Fundamentals of Public Speaking and Lab (2/1)
COMP 106/L Computing in Engineering and Science and Lab (2/1)*
MATH 150B Calculus II (5)
MATH 391 Field Experience in the Mathematics of the Public Schools (2)
PHIL 230 Introduction to Formal Logic I (3)

*Note: COMP 110/L (3/1) may be used to meet this requirement.

Year Two: First Semester (16 units)

ENGL 255 Introduction to Literature (3)
MATH 250 Calculus III (3)
PHYS 220A/AL Mechanics and Lab (3/1)
POLS 155 American Political Institutions (3)
ASTR 301 The Dynamical Universe (3)

Year Two: Second Semester (16 units)

EPC 420 Educational Psychology of Adolescence (3)
MATH 262 Introduction to Linear Algebra (3)
MATH 382/L Intro Scientific Computing and Lab (2/1)
PSY 312 Psychological Aspects of Parenthood (3)
GE Subject Explorations: Natural Sciences and Lab (3/1)

Additional requirements: Students should take the CBEST and apply for admission to the Credential Program in the College of Education.

Year Three: First Semester (15 units)

AAS 417/AFRS 417/ARMN 417/CHS 417/ELPS 417 Equity and Diversity in Schools (3)
MATH 320 Foundations of Higher Mathematics (3)
MATH 341 Applied Statistics I (3)
SED 511 Fundamentals of Secondary Education in Multiethnic Secondary Schools (3)
SED 514 Computers in Instruction (3)

Year Three: Second Semester (16 units)

HSCI 466ADO Health Concerns of the Adolescent (1)
HIST 371 Problems in American History: 1865 to Present (3)
MATH 360 Abstract Algebra I (3)
MATH 370 Foundations of Geometry (3)
MATH Upper Division Elective (3)**
SPED 420 Improving the Learning of Students with Special Needs through Differentiated Instruction and Collaboration (3)

Year Four: First Semester (16 units)

MATH 450A Advanced Calculus I (3)
MATH Upper Division Elective (3)**
SED 521 Content Area Literacy and Learning in Multiethnic Secondary Schools (3)
SED 525MA/L Methods of Teaching Mathematics in the Secondary School and Lab (2/1)
SED 554/S Supervised Field Experience and Seminar (4)

Year Four: Second Semester (13 units)

MATH 490 Capstone Course (3)
SED 529 Teaching English Learners in Multiethnic Secondary Schools (3)
SED 555 Supervised Practicum and Seminar (5/2)

**Select upper division Math elective with an advisor.
Recommended courses: MATH 340, MATH 351, MATH 366, MATH 441, MATH 460, MATH 462, MATH 463, MATH 470 and MATH 483.

Total Units Required for the B.A. Degree: 122

Contact

Department of Mathematics
Chair: Rabia Djellouli
Live Oak Hall (LO) 1300
(818) 677-2721

Student Learning Outcomes

Students shall be able to:

  1. Devise proofs of basic results concerning sets and number systems.
  2. Rigorously establish fundamental analytic properties and results such as limits, continuity, differentiability and integrability.
  3. Demonstrate facility with the objects, terminology, and concepts of linear algebra.
  4. Demonstrate facility with the terminology, use of symbols, and concepts of probability.
  5. Write simple computer programs to perform computations arising in the mathematical sciences.

Four-Year Integrated and Junior-Year Integrated Undergraduate Option
Student Learning Outcomes

(As determined by the Department of Secondary Education.)

Single Subject Credential candidates will demonstrate proficiency in Teacher Performance Expectations within the six California Standards for the Teaching Profession:

  1. Engaging and supporting all students in learning.
  2. Creating and maintaining effective environments for student learning.
  3. Understanding and organizing subject matter for student learning.
  4. Planning instruction and designing learning experiences for all students.
  5. Assessing student learning.
  6. Developing as a professional educator.